http://arabnews.com/opinion/columns/article580977.ece
Is it late to save East Jerusalem?
By OSAMA AL SHARIF
In the frustrating pursuit of Palestinian-Israeli peace settlement based on the 
concept of a two-state solution, one particular issue emerges as the most 
cumbersome and, in the view of most Israelis, non-negotiable. 

It is the fate of Arab East Jerusalem, occupied along with the rest of the West 
Bank, Gaza Strip and Golan Heights in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.

Earlier this week Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told participants in an 
international conference on Jerusalem in Doha that Israeli measures to Judaize 
East Jerusalem represent the last battle to seal the fate of the Holy City and 
its environs. He described Israeli “measures of annexation” as “null and void. 
East Jerusalem is the eternal capital of Palestine.” Israel, he said, was 
“using the ugliest and most dangerous means to implement plans to erase and 
remove the Arab Islamic and the Christian character of East Jerusalem.”

The Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani called on the UN to 
“investigate the measures Israel has taken to Judaize Jerusalem since its 
occupation in 1967.” President Abbas supported the suggestion and Palestinian 
officials said they will take their case to the UN General Assembly if their 
bid to censure Israeli actions were foiled by an American veto at the Security 
Council.

Israel has condemned the conference as Israel-bashing carnival and criticized 
the presence of UN Middle East envoy Robert Serry. Israeli Prime Minister 
Benjamin Netanyahu called the Palestinian leader's remarks “a harshly 
inflammatory speech from someone who claims that he is bent on peace.”

But in spite of the heated rhetoric Israel appears committed to systematic 
scheme to destroy East Jerusalem buildings and neighborhoods, build and expand 
Jewish settlements in and around the city, enforce economic siege on Arab 
residents to force them out and threaten the integrity of Al Haram Al Sharif 
complex that includes Al Aqsa Mosque whose Western Wall is holy to Jews and is 
believed to be the only remaining structure of the destroyed Third Temple.

Israel annexed East Jerusalem after the 1967 war. It declared the city its 
eternal and united capital. And although such move was never recognized by the 
international community, little has been done to stop illegal Israeli measures 
to change the character of occupied East Jerusalem.

And since Palestinian-Israeli negotiations took off in Oslo, Norway, in the 
early 1990s, culminating with the signing of the Oslo Peace Accords in 1993, 
negotiators on both sides were unable to decide the final status of the city 
although the principle of withdrawal from East Jerusalem or parts of it was 
agreed by Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat.

East Jerusalem and other issues such as Palestinian refugees and borders were 
left unsettled as part of a final status round of negotiations that should have 
been concluded by the end of last century. After the failure of the Camp David 
peace talks in 2000, particularly over the future of East Jerusalem, the entire 
process collapsed.

But even after Oslo successive Israeli governments continued to build and 
expand Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. In recent years 
Israeli plans to Judaize the Arab part of the city surged, and in recent weeks 
tension between Arab residents and Jewish radicals over access to Al Aqsa 
Mosque reached unprecedented levels.

Sustained Israeli measures target the Arab residents of Jerusalem in many ways 
but with one aim in particular; to alter the demographic realities in favor of 
non-Arabs. Between 1980 and 2007 the Jewish population of Jerusalem grew from 
100,000 to 489,000, according to Jerusalem Municipality figures. On the other 
hand and according to Azmi Abu Souad, a former employee of the Jerusalem 
Municipality who is now the general director of the civil rights department at 
PLO, while 170,000 Palestinians carry Jerusalem identity documents, the number 
of Palestinians actually residing in the city is, in fact, less than 100,000. 
This contradicts other figures, which put the total Arab population of the old 
city and its neighborhoods at over 200,000.

Souad estimates that of the 200,000 Palestinians, 60,000 live outside the 
region — in Jordan, the US, and elsewhere. As many as 70,000 Palestinians with 
blue identity cards live in the West Bank, outside the boundaries of the city. 
With Israel's restrictive policy of granting building permits many of the 
city's residents are moving to the West Bank. Arabs have become a minority in 
their own city. It is the remaining 70,000 to 100,000 Palestinians still living 
in East Jerusalem who are now being targeted by Israel. Ending Arab presence in 
the Old City could become a reality by the year 2020.

Of the half million Jewish residents of both sectors of Jerusalem, more than 40 
percent are living in East Jerusalem. But recent government plans to build new 
housing units and expand existing settlements will make Jews the overwhelming 
majority in East Jerusalem in few years.

Jerusalem's predicament is representative of the plight of Palestinians living 
in the West Bank, where Israel too is engaged in settlement building in order 
to annex major chunks of the Palestinian territories.

The Doha conference has underlined the real threats to the character and 
identity of East Jerusalem. But that is not enough. Jerusalem is an Arab and 
Islamic city and the task of saving it must lie with the Arab and Muslim 
worlds. Israel is so close to achieving its sinister goals and unless an 
international campaign is launched now its fate will be sealed within few years.


— Osama Al Sharif is a journalist and political commentator based in Amman.


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